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1 | """distutils.dist |
2 | ||
3 | Provides the Distribution class, which represents the module distribution | |
4 | being built/installed/distributed. | |
5 | """ | |
6 | ||
7 | import sys | |
8 | import os | |
9 | import re | |
10 | import pathlib | |
11 | import contextlib | |
12 | import logging | |
13 | from email import message_from_file | |
14 | ||
15 | try: | |
16 | import warnings | |
17 | except ImportError: | |
18 | warnings = None | |
19 | ||
20 | from .errors import ( | |
21 | DistutilsOptionError, | |
22 | DistutilsModuleError, | |
23 | DistutilsArgError, | |
24 | DistutilsClassError, | |
25 | ) | |
26 | from .fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt, translate_longopt | |
27 | from .util import check_environ, strtobool, rfc822_escape | |
28 | from ._log import log | |
29 | from .debug import DEBUG | |
30 | ||
31 | # Regex to define acceptable Distutils command names. This is not *quite* | |
32 | # the same as a Python NAME -- I don't allow leading underscores. The fact | |
33 | # that they're very similar is no coincidence; the default naming scheme is | |
34 | # to look for a Python module named after the command. | |
35 | command_re = re.compile(r'^[a-zA-Z]([a-zA-Z0-9_]*)$') | |
36 | ||
37 | ||
38 | def _ensure_list(value, fieldname): | |
39 | if isinstance(value, str): | |
40 | # a string containing comma separated values is okay. It will | |
41 | # be converted to a list by Distribution.finalize_options(). | |
42 | pass | |
43 | elif not isinstance(value, list): | |
44 | # passing a tuple or an iterator perhaps, warn and convert | |
45 | typename = type(value).__name__ | |
46 | msg = "Warning: '{fieldname}' should be a list, got type '{typename}'" | |
47 | msg = msg.format(**locals()) | |
48 | log.warning(msg) | |
49 | value = list(value) | |
50 | return value | |
51 | ||
52 | ||
53 | class Distribution: | |
54 | """The core of the Distutils. Most of the work hiding behind 'setup' | |
55 | is really done within a Distribution instance, which farms the work out | |
56 | to the Distutils commands specified on the command line. | |
57 | ||
58 | Setup scripts will almost never instantiate Distribution directly, | |
59 | unless the 'setup()' function is totally inadequate to their needs. | |
60 | However, it is conceivable that a setup script might wish to subclass | |
61 | Distribution for some specialized purpose, and then pass the subclass | |
62 | to 'setup()' as the 'distclass' keyword argument. If so, it is | |
63 | necessary to respect the expectations that 'setup' has of Distribution. | |
64 | See the code for 'setup()', in core.py, for details. | |
65 | """ | |
66 | ||
67 | # 'global_options' describes the command-line options that may be | |
68 | # supplied to the setup script prior to any actual commands. | |
69 | # Eg. "./setup.py -n" or "./setup.py --quiet" both take advantage of | |
70 | # these global options. This list should be kept to a bare minimum, | |
71 | # since every global option is also valid as a command option -- and we | |
72 | # don't want to pollute the commands with too many options that they | |
73 | # have minimal control over. | |
74 | # The fourth entry for verbose means that it can be repeated. | |
75 | global_options = [ | |
76 | ('verbose', 'v', "run verbosely (default)", 1), | |
77 | ('quiet', 'q', "run quietly (turns verbosity off)"), | |
78 | ('dry-run', 'n', "don't actually do anything"), | |
79 | ('help', 'h', "show detailed help message"), | |
80 | ('no-user-cfg', None, 'ignore pydistutils.cfg in your home directory'), | |
81 | ] | |
82 | ||
83 | # 'common_usage' is a short (2-3 line) string describing the common | |
84 | # usage of the setup script. | |
85 | common_usage = """\ | |
86 | Common commands: (see '--help-commands' for more) | |
87 | ||
88 | setup.py build will build the package underneath 'build/' | |
89 | setup.py install will install the package | |
90 | """ | |
91 | ||
92 | # options that are not propagated to the commands | |
93 | display_options = [ | |
94 | ('help-commands', None, "list all available commands"), | |
95 | ('name', None, "print package name"), | |
96 | ('version', 'V', "print package version"), | |
97 | ('fullname', None, "print <package name>-<version>"), | |
98 | ('author', None, "print the author's name"), | |
99 | ('author-email', None, "print the author's email address"), | |
100 | ('maintainer', None, "print the maintainer's name"), | |
101 | ('maintainer-email', None, "print the maintainer's email address"), | |
102 | ('contact', None, "print the maintainer's name if known, else the author's"), | |
103 | ( | |
104 | 'contact-email', | |
105 | None, | |
106 | "print the maintainer's email address if known, else the author's", | |
107 | ), | |
108 | ('url', None, "print the URL for this package"), | |
109 | ('license', None, "print the license of the package"), | |
110 | ('licence', None, "alias for --license"), | |
111 | ('description', None, "print the package description"), | |
112 | ('long-description', None, "print the long package description"), | |
113 | ('platforms', None, "print the list of platforms"), | |
114 | ('classifiers', None, "print the list of classifiers"), | |
115 | ('keywords', None, "print the list of keywords"), | |
116 | ('provides', None, "print the list of packages/modules provided"), | |
117 | ('requires', None, "print the list of packages/modules required"), | |
118 | ('obsoletes', None, "print the list of packages/modules made obsolete"), | |
119 | ] | |
120 | display_option_names = [translate_longopt(x[0]) for x in display_options] | |
121 | ||
122 | # negative options are options that exclude other options | |
123 | negative_opt = {'quiet': 'verbose'} | |
124 | ||
125 | # -- Creation/initialization methods ------------------------------- | |
126 | ||
127 | def __init__(self, attrs=None): # noqa: C901 | |
128 | """Construct a new Distribution instance: initialize all the | |
129 | attributes of a Distribution, and then use 'attrs' (a dictionary | |
130 | mapping attribute names to values) to assign some of those | |
131 | attributes their "real" values. (Any attributes not mentioned in | |
132 | 'attrs' will be assigned to some null value: 0, None, an empty list | |
133 | or dictionary, etc.) Most importantly, initialize the | |
134 | 'command_obj' attribute to the empty dictionary; this will be | |
135 | filled in with real command objects by 'parse_command_line()'. | |
136 | """ | |
137 | ||
138 | # Default values for our command-line options | |
139 | self.verbose = 1 | |
140 | self.dry_run = 0 | |
141 | self.help = 0 | |
142 | for attr in self.display_option_names: | |
143 | setattr(self, attr, 0) | |
144 | ||
145 | # Store the distribution meta-data (name, version, author, and so | |
146 | # forth) in a separate object -- we're getting to have enough | |
147 | # information here (and enough command-line options) that it's | |
148 | # worth it. Also delegate 'get_XXX()' methods to the 'metadata' | |
149 | # object in a sneaky and underhanded (but efficient!) way. | |
150 | self.metadata = DistributionMetadata() | |
151 | for basename in self.metadata._METHOD_BASENAMES: | |
152 | method_name = "get_" + basename | |
153 | setattr(self, method_name, getattr(self.metadata, method_name)) | |
154 | ||
155 | # 'cmdclass' maps command names to class objects, so we | |
156 | # can 1) quickly figure out which class to instantiate when | |
157 | # we need to create a new command object, and 2) have a way | |
158 | # for the setup script to override command classes | |
159 | self.cmdclass = {} | |
160 | ||
161 | # 'command_packages' is a list of packages in which commands | |
162 | # are searched for. The factory for command 'foo' is expected | |
163 | # to be named 'foo' in the module 'foo' in one of the packages | |
164 | # named here. This list is searched from the left; an error | |
165 | # is raised if no named package provides the command being | |
166 | # searched for. (Always access using get_command_packages().) | |
167 | self.command_packages = None | |
168 | ||
169 | # 'script_name' and 'script_args' are usually set to sys.argv[0] | |
170 | # and sys.argv[1:], but they can be overridden when the caller is | |
171 | # not necessarily a setup script run from the command-line. | |
172 | self.script_name = None | |
173 | self.script_args = None | |
174 | ||
175 | # 'command_options' is where we store command options between | |
176 | # parsing them (from config files, the command-line, etc.) and when | |
177 | # they are actually needed -- ie. when the command in question is | |
178 | # instantiated. It is a dictionary of dictionaries of 2-tuples: | |
179 | # command_options = { command_name : { option : (source, value) } } | |
180 | self.command_options = {} | |
181 | ||
182 | # 'dist_files' is the list of (command, pyversion, file) that | |
183 | # have been created by any dist commands run so far. This is | |
184 | # filled regardless of whether the run is dry or not. pyversion | |
185 | # gives sysconfig.get_python_version() if the dist file is | |
186 | # specific to a Python version, 'any' if it is good for all | |
187 | # Python versions on the target platform, and '' for a source | |
188 | # file. pyversion should not be used to specify minimum or | |
189 | # maximum required Python versions; use the metainfo for that | |
190 | # instead. | |
191 | self.dist_files = [] | |
192 | ||
193 | # These options are really the business of various commands, rather | |
194 | # than of the Distribution itself. We provide aliases for them in | |
195 | # Distribution as a convenience to the developer. | |
196 | self.packages = None | |
197 | self.package_data = {} | |
198 | self.package_dir = None | |
199 | self.py_modules = None | |
200 | self.libraries = None | |
201 | self.headers = None | |
202 | self.ext_modules = None | |
203 | self.ext_package = None | |
204 | self.include_dirs = None | |
205 | self.extra_path = None | |
206 | self.scripts = None | |
207 | self.data_files = None | |
208 | self.password = '' | |
209 | ||
210 | # And now initialize bookkeeping stuff that can't be supplied by | |
211 | # the caller at all. 'command_obj' maps command names to | |
212 | # Command instances -- that's how we enforce that every command | |
213 | # class is a singleton. | |
214 | self.command_obj = {} | |
215 | ||
216 | # 'have_run' maps command names to boolean values; it keeps track | |
217 | # of whether we have actually run a particular command, to make it | |
218 | # cheap to "run" a command whenever we think we might need to -- if | |
219 | # it's already been done, no need for expensive filesystem | |
220 | # operations, we just check the 'have_run' dictionary and carry on. | |
221 | # It's only safe to query 'have_run' for a command class that has | |
222 | # been instantiated -- a false value will be inserted when the | |
223 | # command object is created, and replaced with a true value when | |
224 | # the command is successfully run. Thus it's probably best to use | |
225 | # '.get()' rather than a straight lookup. | |
226 | self.have_run = {} | |
227 | ||
228 | # Now we'll use the attrs dictionary (ultimately, keyword args from | |
229 | # the setup script) to possibly override any or all of these | |
230 | # distribution options. | |
231 | ||
232 | if attrs: | |
233 | # Pull out the set of command options and work on them | |
234 | # specifically. Note that this order guarantees that aliased | |
235 | # command options will override any supplied redundantly | |
236 | # through the general options dictionary. | |
237 | options = attrs.get('options') | |
238 | if options is not None: | |
239 | del attrs['options'] | |
240 | for (command, cmd_options) in options.items(): | |
241 | opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command) | |
242 | for (opt, val) in cmd_options.items(): | |
243 | opt_dict[opt] = ("setup script", val) | |
244 | ||
245 | if 'licence' in attrs: | |
246 | attrs['license'] = attrs['licence'] | |
247 | del attrs['licence'] | |
248 | msg = "'licence' distribution option is deprecated; use 'license'" | |
249 | if warnings is not None: | |
250 | warnings.warn(msg) | |
251 | else: | |
252 | sys.stderr.write(msg + "\n") | |
253 | ||
254 | # Now work on the rest of the attributes. Any attribute that's | |
255 | # not already defined is invalid! | |
256 | for (key, val) in attrs.items(): | |
257 | if hasattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key): | |
258 | getattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key)(val) | |
259 | elif hasattr(self.metadata, key): | |
260 | setattr(self.metadata, key, val) | |
261 | elif hasattr(self, key): | |
262 | setattr(self, key, val) | |
263 | else: | |
264 | msg = "Unknown distribution option: %s" % repr(key) | |
265 | warnings.warn(msg) | |
266 | ||
267 | # no-user-cfg is handled before other command line args | |
268 | # because other args override the config files, and this | |
269 | # one is needed before we can load the config files. | |
270 | # If attrs['script_args'] wasn't passed, assume false. | |
271 | # | |
272 | # This also make sure we just look at the global options | |
273 | self.want_user_cfg = True | |
274 | ||
275 | if self.script_args is not None: | |
276 | for arg in self.script_args: | |
277 | if not arg.startswith('-'): | |
278 | break | |
279 | if arg == '--no-user-cfg': | |
280 | self.want_user_cfg = False | |
281 | break | |
282 | ||
283 | self.finalize_options() | |
284 | ||
285 | def get_option_dict(self, command): | |
286 | """Get the option dictionary for a given command. If that | |
287 | command's option dictionary hasn't been created yet, then create it | |
288 | and return the new dictionary; otherwise, return the existing | |
289 | option dictionary. | |
290 | """ | |
291 | dict = self.command_options.get(command) | |
292 | if dict is None: | |
293 | dict = self.command_options[command] = {} | |
294 | return dict | |
295 | ||
296 | def dump_option_dicts(self, header=None, commands=None, indent=""): | |
297 | from pprint import pformat | |
298 | ||
299 | if commands is None: # dump all command option dicts | |
300 | commands = sorted(self.command_options.keys()) | |
301 | ||
302 | if header is not None: | |
303 | self.announce(indent + header) | |
304 | indent = indent + " " | |
305 | ||
306 | if not commands: | |
307 | self.announce(indent + "no commands known yet") | |
308 | return | |
309 | ||
310 | for cmd_name in commands: | |
311 | opt_dict = self.command_options.get(cmd_name) | |
312 | if opt_dict is None: | |
313 | self.announce(indent + "no option dict for '%s' command" % cmd_name) | |
314 | else: | |
315 | self.announce(indent + "option dict for '%s' command:" % cmd_name) | |
316 | out = pformat(opt_dict) | |
317 | for line in out.split('\n'): | |
318 | self.announce(indent + " " + line) | |
319 | ||
320 | # -- Config file finding/parsing methods --------------------------- | |
321 | ||
322 | def find_config_files(self): | |
323 | """Find as many configuration files as should be processed for this | |
324 | platform, and return a list of filenames in the order in which they | |
325 | should be parsed. The filenames returned are guaranteed to exist | |
326 | (modulo nasty race conditions). | |
327 | ||
328 | There are multiple possible config files: | |
329 | - distutils.cfg in the Distutils installation directory (i.e. | |
330 | where the top-level Distutils __inst__.py file lives) | |
331 | - a file in the user's home directory named .pydistutils.cfg | |
332 | on Unix and pydistutils.cfg on Windows/Mac; may be disabled | |
333 | with the ``--no-user-cfg`` option | |
334 | - setup.cfg in the current directory | |
335 | - a file named by an environment variable | |
336 | """ | |
337 | check_environ() | |
338 | files = [str(path) for path in self._gen_paths() if os.path.isfile(path)] | |
339 | ||
340 | if DEBUG: | |
341 | self.announce("using config files: %s" % ', '.join(files)) | |
342 | ||
343 | return files | |
344 | ||
345 | def _gen_paths(self): | |
346 | # The system-wide Distutils config file | |
347 | sys_dir = pathlib.Path(sys.modules['distutils'].__file__).parent | |
348 | yield sys_dir / "distutils.cfg" | |
349 | ||
350 | # The per-user config file | |
351 | prefix = '.' * (os.name == 'posix') | |
352 | filename = prefix + 'pydistutils.cfg' | |
353 | if self.want_user_cfg: | |
354 | yield pathlib.Path('~').expanduser() / filename | |
355 | ||
356 | # All platforms support local setup.cfg | |
357 | yield pathlib.Path('setup.cfg') | |
358 | ||
359 | # Additional config indicated in the environment | |
360 | with contextlib.suppress(TypeError): | |
361 | yield pathlib.Path(os.getenv("DIST_EXTRA_CONFIG")) | |
362 | ||
363 | def parse_config_files(self, filenames=None): # noqa: C901 | |
364 | from configparser import ConfigParser | |
365 | ||
366 | # Ignore install directory options if we have a venv | |
367 | if sys.prefix != sys.base_prefix: | |
368 | ignore_options = [ | |
369 | 'install-base', | |
370 | 'install-platbase', | |
371 | 'install-lib', | |
372 | 'install-platlib', | |
373 | 'install-purelib', | |
374 | 'install-headers', | |
375 | 'install-scripts', | |
376 | 'install-data', | |
377 | 'prefix', | |
378 | 'exec-prefix', | |
379 | 'home', | |
380 | 'user', | |
381 | 'root', | |
382 | ] | |
383 | else: | |
384 | ignore_options = [] | |
385 | ||
386 | ignore_options = frozenset(ignore_options) | |
387 | ||
388 | if filenames is None: | |
389 | filenames = self.find_config_files() | |
390 | ||
391 | if DEBUG: | |
392 | self.announce("Distribution.parse_config_files():") | |
393 | ||
394 | parser = ConfigParser() | |
395 | for filename in filenames: | |
396 | if DEBUG: | |
397 | self.announce(" reading %s" % filename) | |
398 | parser.read(filename) | |
399 | for section in parser.sections(): | |
400 | options = parser.options(section) | |
401 | opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(section) | |
402 | ||
403 | for opt in options: | |
404 | if opt != '__name__' and opt not in ignore_options: | |
405 | val = parser.get(section, opt) | |
406 | opt = opt.replace('-', '_') | |
407 | opt_dict[opt] = (filename, val) | |
408 | ||
409 | # Make the ConfigParser forget everything (so we retain | |
410 | # the original filenames that options come from) | |
411 | parser.__init__() | |
412 | ||
413 | # If there was a "global" section in the config file, use it | |
414 | # to set Distribution options. | |
415 | ||
416 | if 'global' in self.command_options: | |
417 | for (opt, (src, val)) in self.command_options['global'].items(): | |
418 | alias = self.negative_opt.get(opt) | |
419 | try: | |
420 | if alias: | |
421 | setattr(self, alias, not strtobool(val)) | |
422 | elif opt in ('verbose', 'dry_run'): # ugh! | |
423 | setattr(self, opt, strtobool(val)) | |
424 | else: | |
425 | setattr(self, opt, val) | |
426 | except ValueError as msg: | |
427 | raise DistutilsOptionError(msg) | |
428 | ||
429 | # -- Command-line parsing methods ---------------------------------- | |
430 | ||
431 | def parse_command_line(self): | |
432 | """Parse the setup script's command line, taken from the | |
433 | 'script_args' instance attribute (which defaults to 'sys.argv[1:]' | |
434 | -- see 'setup()' in core.py). This list is first processed for | |
435 | "global options" -- options that set attributes of the Distribution | |
436 | instance. Then, it is alternately scanned for Distutils commands | |
437 | and options for that command. Each new command terminates the | |
438 | options for the previous command. The allowed options for a | |
439 | command are determined by the 'user_options' attribute of the | |
440 | command class -- thus, we have to be able to load command classes | |
441 | in order to parse the command line. Any error in that 'options' | |
442 | attribute raises DistutilsGetoptError; any error on the | |
443 | command-line raises DistutilsArgError. If no Distutils commands | |
444 | were found on the command line, raises DistutilsArgError. Return | |
445 | true if command-line was successfully parsed and we should carry | |
446 | on with executing commands; false if no errors but we shouldn't | |
447 | execute commands (currently, this only happens if user asks for | |
448 | help). | |
449 | """ | |
450 | # | |
451 | # We now have enough information to show the Macintosh dialog | |
452 | # that allows the user to interactively specify the "command line". | |
453 | # | |
454 | toplevel_options = self._get_toplevel_options() | |
455 | ||
456 | # We have to parse the command line a bit at a time -- global | |
457 | # options, then the first command, then its options, and so on -- | |
458 | # because each command will be handled by a different class, and | |
459 | # the options that are valid for a particular class aren't known | |
460 | # until we have loaded the command class, which doesn't happen | |
461 | # until we know what the command is. | |
462 | ||
463 | self.commands = [] | |
464 | parser = FancyGetopt(toplevel_options + self.display_options) | |
465 | parser.set_negative_aliases(self.negative_opt) | |
466 | parser.set_aliases({'licence': 'license'}) | |
467 | args = parser.getopt(args=self.script_args, object=self) | |
468 | option_order = parser.get_option_order() | |
469 | logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.WARN - 10 * self.verbose) | |
470 | ||
471 | # for display options we return immediately | |
472 | if self.handle_display_options(option_order): | |
473 | return | |
474 | while args: | |
475 | args = self._parse_command_opts(parser, args) | |
476 | if args is None: # user asked for help (and got it) | |
477 | return | |
478 | ||
479 | # Handle the cases of --help as a "global" option, ie. | |
480 | # "setup.py --help" and "setup.py --help command ...". For the | |
481 | # former, we show global options (--verbose, --dry-run, etc.) | |
482 | # and display-only options (--name, --version, etc.); for the | |
483 | # latter, we omit the display-only options and show help for | |
484 | # each command listed on the command line. | |
485 | if self.help: | |
486 | self._show_help( | |
487 | parser, display_options=len(self.commands) == 0, commands=self.commands | |
488 | ) | |
489 | return | |
490 | ||
491 | # Oops, no commands found -- an end-user error | |
492 | if not self.commands: | |
493 | raise DistutilsArgError("no commands supplied") | |
494 | ||
495 | # All is well: return true | |
496 | return True | |
497 | ||
498 | def _get_toplevel_options(self): | |
499 | """Return the non-display options recognized at the top level. | |
500 | ||
501 | This includes options that are recognized *only* at the top | |
502 | level as well as options recognized for commands. | |
503 | """ | |
504 | return self.global_options + [ | |
505 | ( | |
506 | "command-packages=", | |
507 | None, | |
508 | "list of packages that provide distutils commands", | |
509 | ), | |
510 | ] | |
511 | ||
512 | def _parse_command_opts(self, parser, args): # noqa: C901 | |
513 | """Parse the command-line options for a single command. | |
514 | 'parser' must be a FancyGetopt instance; 'args' must be the list | |
515 | of arguments, starting with the current command (whose options | |
516 | we are about to parse). Returns a new version of 'args' with | |
517 | the next command at the front of the list; will be the empty | |
518 | list if there are no more commands on the command line. Returns | |
519 | None if the user asked for help on this command. | |
520 | """ | |
521 | # late import because of mutual dependence between these modules | |
522 | from distutils.cmd import Command | |
523 | ||
524 | # Pull the current command from the head of the command line | |
525 | command = args[0] | |
526 | if not command_re.match(command): | |
527 | raise SystemExit("invalid command name '%s'" % command) | |
528 | self.commands.append(command) | |
529 | ||
530 | # Dig up the command class that implements this command, so we | |
531 | # 1) know that it's a valid command, and 2) know which options | |
532 | # it takes. | |
533 | try: | |
534 | cmd_class = self.get_command_class(command) | |
535 | except DistutilsModuleError as msg: | |
536 | raise DistutilsArgError(msg) | |
537 | ||
538 | # Require that the command class be derived from Command -- want | |
539 | # to be sure that the basic "command" interface is implemented. | |
540 | if not issubclass(cmd_class, Command): | |
541 | raise DistutilsClassError( | |
542 | "command class %s must subclass Command" % cmd_class | |
543 | ) | |
544 | ||
545 | # Also make sure that the command object provides a list of its | |
546 | # known options. | |
547 | if not ( | |
548 | hasattr(cmd_class, 'user_options') | |
549 | and isinstance(cmd_class.user_options, list) | |
550 | ): | |
551 | msg = ( | |
552 | "command class %s must provide " | |
553 | "'user_options' attribute (a list of tuples)" | |
554 | ) | |
555 | raise DistutilsClassError(msg % cmd_class) | |
556 | ||
557 | # If the command class has a list of negative alias options, | |
558 | # merge it in with the global negative aliases. | |
559 | negative_opt = self.negative_opt | |
560 | if hasattr(cmd_class, 'negative_opt'): | |
561 | negative_opt = negative_opt.copy() | |
562 | negative_opt.update(cmd_class.negative_opt) | |
563 | ||
564 | # Check for help_options in command class. They have a different | |
565 | # format (tuple of four) so we need to preprocess them here. | |
566 | if hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and isinstance( | |
567 | cmd_class.help_options, list | |
568 | ): | |
569 | help_options = fix_help_options(cmd_class.help_options) | |
570 | else: | |
571 | help_options = [] | |
572 | ||
573 | # All commands support the global options too, just by adding | |
574 | # in 'global_options'. | |
575 | parser.set_option_table( | |
576 | self.global_options + cmd_class.user_options + help_options | |
577 | ) | |
578 | parser.set_negative_aliases(negative_opt) | |
579 | (args, opts) = parser.getopt(args[1:]) | |
580 | if hasattr(opts, 'help') and opts.help: | |
581 | self._show_help(parser, display_options=0, commands=[cmd_class]) | |
582 | return | |
583 | ||
584 | if hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and isinstance( | |
585 | cmd_class.help_options, list | |
586 | ): | |
587 | help_option_found = 0 | |
588 | for (help_option, short, desc, func) in cmd_class.help_options: | |
589 | if hasattr(opts, parser.get_attr_name(help_option)): | |
590 | help_option_found = 1 | |
591 | if callable(func): | |
592 | func() | |
593 | else: | |
594 | raise DistutilsClassError( | |
595 | "invalid help function %r for help option '%s': " | |
596 | "must be a callable object (function, etc.)" | |
597 | % (func, help_option) | |
598 | ) | |
599 | ||
600 | if help_option_found: | |
601 | return | |
602 | ||
603 | # Put the options from the command-line into their official | |
604 | # holding pen, the 'command_options' dictionary. | |
605 | opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command) | |
606 | for (name, value) in vars(opts).items(): | |
607 | opt_dict[name] = ("command line", value) | |
608 | ||
609 | return args | |
610 | ||
611 | def finalize_options(self): | |
612 | """Set final values for all the options on the Distribution | |
613 | instance, analogous to the .finalize_options() method of Command | |
614 | objects. | |
615 | """ | |
616 | for attr in ('keywords', 'platforms'): | |
617 | value = getattr(self.metadata, attr) | |
618 | if value is None: | |
619 | continue | |
620 | if isinstance(value, str): | |
621 | value = [elm.strip() for elm in value.split(',')] | |
622 | setattr(self.metadata, attr, value) | |
623 | ||
624 | def _show_help(self, parser, global_options=1, display_options=1, commands=[]): | |
625 | """Show help for the setup script command-line in the form of | |
626 | several lists of command-line options. 'parser' should be a | |
627 | FancyGetopt instance; do not expect it to be returned in the | |
628 | same state, as its option table will be reset to make it | |
629 | generate the correct help text. | |
630 | ||
631 | If 'global_options' is true, lists the global options: | |
632 | --verbose, --dry-run, etc. If 'display_options' is true, lists | |
633 | the "display-only" options: --name, --version, etc. Finally, | |
634 | lists per-command help for every command name or command class | |
635 | in 'commands'. | |
636 | """ | |
637 | # late import because of mutual dependence between these modules | |
638 | from distutils.core import gen_usage | |
639 | from distutils.cmd import Command | |
640 | ||
641 | if global_options: | |
642 | if display_options: | |
643 | options = self._get_toplevel_options() | |
644 | else: | |
645 | options = self.global_options | |
646 | parser.set_option_table(options) | |
647 | parser.print_help(self.common_usage + "\nGlobal options:") | |
648 | print('') | |
649 | ||
650 | if display_options: | |
651 | parser.set_option_table(self.display_options) | |
652 | parser.print_help( | |
653 | "Information display options (just display " | |
654 | + "information, ignore any commands)" | |
655 | ) | |
656 | print('') | |
657 | ||
658 | for command in self.commands: | |
659 | if isinstance(command, type) and issubclass(command, Command): | |
660 | klass = command | |
661 | else: | |
662 | klass = self.get_command_class(command) | |
663 | if hasattr(klass, 'help_options') and isinstance(klass.help_options, list): | |
664 | parser.set_option_table( | |
665 | klass.user_options + fix_help_options(klass.help_options) | |
666 | ) | |
667 | else: | |
668 | parser.set_option_table(klass.user_options) | |
669 | parser.print_help("Options for '%s' command:" % klass.__name__) | |
670 | print('') | |
671 | ||
672 | print(gen_usage(self.script_name)) | |
673 | ||
674 | def handle_display_options(self, option_order): | |
675 | """If there were any non-global "display-only" options | |
676 | (--help-commands or the metadata display options) on the command | |
677 | line, display the requested info and return true; else return | |
678 | false. | |
679 | """ | |
680 | from distutils.core import gen_usage | |
681 | ||
682 | # User just wants a list of commands -- we'll print it out and stop | |
683 | # processing now (ie. if they ran "setup --help-commands foo bar", | |
684 | # we ignore "foo bar"). | |
685 | if self.help_commands: | |
686 | self.print_commands() | |
687 | print('') | |
688 | print(gen_usage(self.script_name)) | |
689 | return 1 | |
690 | ||
691 | # If user supplied any of the "display metadata" options, then | |
692 | # display that metadata in the order in which the user supplied the | |
693 | # metadata options. | |
694 | any_display_options = 0 | |
695 | is_display_option = {} | |
696 | for option in self.display_options: | |
697 | is_display_option[option[0]] = 1 | |
698 | ||
699 | for (opt, val) in option_order: | |
700 | if val and is_display_option.get(opt): | |
701 | opt = translate_longopt(opt) | |
702 | value = getattr(self.metadata, "get_" + opt)() | |
703 | if opt in ['keywords', 'platforms']: | |
704 | print(','.join(value)) | |
705 | elif opt in ('classifiers', 'provides', 'requires', 'obsoletes'): | |
706 | print('\n'.join(value)) | |
707 | else: | |
708 | print(value) | |
709 | any_display_options = 1 | |
710 | ||
711 | return any_display_options | |
712 | ||
713 | def print_command_list(self, commands, header, max_length): | |
714 | """Print a subset of the list of all commands -- used by | |
715 | 'print_commands()'. | |
716 | """ | |
717 | print(header + ":") | |
718 | ||
719 | for cmd in commands: | |
720 | klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd) | |
721 | if not klass: | |
722 | klass = self.get_command_class(cmd) | |
723 | try: | |
724 | description = klass.description | |
725 | except AttributeError: | |
726 | description = "(no description available)" | |
727 | ||
728 | print(" %-*s %s" % (max_length, cmd, description)) | |
729 | ||
730 | def print_commands(self): | |
731 | """Print out a help message listing all available commands with a | |
732 | description of each. The list is divided into "standard commands" | |
733 | (listed in distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands" | |
734 | (mentioned in self.cmdclass, but not a standard command). The | |
735 | descriptions come from the command class attribute | |
736 | 'description'. | |
737 | """ | |
738 | import distutils.command | |
739 | ||
740 | std_commands = distutils.command.__all__ | |
741 | is_std = {} | |
742 | for cmd in std_commands: | |
743 | is_std[cmd] = 1 | |
744 | ||
745 | extra_commands = [] | |
746 | for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys(): | |
747 | if not is_std.get(cmd): | |
748 | extra_commands.append(cmd) | |
749 | ||
750 | max_length = 0 | |
751 | for cmd in std_commands + extra_commands: | |
752 | if len(cmd) > max_length: | |
753 | max_length = len(cmd) | |
754 | ||
755 | self.print_command_list(std_commands, "Standard commands", max_length) | |
756 | if extra_commands: | |
757 | print() | |
758 | self.print_command_list(extra_commands, "Extra commands", max_length) | |
759 | ||
760 | def get_command_list(self): | |
761 | """Get a list of (command, description) tuples. | |
762 | The list is divided into "standard commands" (listed in | |
763 | distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands" (mentioned in | |
764 | self.cmdclass, but not a standard command). The descriptions come | |
765 | from the command class attribute 'description'. | |
766 | """ | |
767 | # Currently this is only used on Mac OS, for the Mac-only GUI | |
768 | # Distutils interface (by Jack Jansen) | |
769 | import distutils.command | |
770 | ||
771 | std_commands = distutils.command.__all__ | |
772 | is_std = {} | |
773 | for cmd in std_commands: | |
774 | is_std[cmd] = 1 | |
775 | ||
776 | extra_commands = [] | |
777 | for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys(): | |
778 | if not is_std.get(cmd): | |
779 | extra_commands.append(cmd) | |
780 | ||
781 | rv = [] | |
782 | for cmd in std_commands + extra_commands: | |
783 | klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd) | |
784 | if not klass: | |
785 | klass = self.get_command_class(cmd) | |
786 | try: | |
787 | description = klass.description | |
788 | except AttributeError: | |
789 | description = "(no description available)" | |
790 | rv.append((cmd, description)) | |
791 | return rv | |
792 | ||
793 | # -- Command class/object methods ---------------------------------- | |
794 | ||
795 | def get_command_packages(self): | |
796 | """Return a list of packages from which commands are loaded.""" | |
797 | pkgs = self.command_packages | |
798 | if not isinstance(pkgs, list): | |
799 | if pkgs is None: | |
800 | pkgs = '' | |
801 | pkgs = [pkg.strip() for pkg in pkgs.split(',') if pkg != ''] | |
802 | if "distutils.command" not in pkgs: | |
803 | pkgs.insert(0, "distutils.command") | |
804 | self.command_packages = pkgs | |
805 | return pkgs | |
806 | ||
807 | def get_command_class(self, command): | |
808 | """Return the class that implements the Distutils command named by | |
809 | 'command'. First we check the 'cmdclass' dictionary; if the | |
810 | command is mentioned there, we fetch the class object from the | |
811 | dictionary and return it. Otherwise we load the command module | |
812 | ("distutils.command." + command) and fetch the command class from | |
813 | the module. The loaded class is also stored in 'cmdclass' | |
814 | to speed future calls to 'get_command_class()'. | |
815 | ||
816 | Raises DistutilsModuleError if the expected module could not be | |
817 | found, or if that module does not define the expected class. | |
818 | """ | |
819 | klass = self.cmdclass.get(command) | |
820 | if klass: | |
821 | return klass | |
822 | ||
823 | for pkgname in self.get_command_packages(): | |
824 | module_name = "{}.{}".format(pkgname, command) | |
825 | klass_name = command | |
826 | ||
827 | try: | |
828 | __import__(module_name) | |
829 | module = sys.modules[module_name] | |
830 | except ImportError: | |
831 | continue | |
832 | ||
833 | try: | |
834 | klass = getattr(module, klass_name) | |
835 | except AttributeError: | |
836 | raise DistutilsModuleError( | |
837 | "invalid command '%s' (no class '%s' in module '%s')" | |
838 | % (command, klass_name, module_name) | |
839 | ) | |
840 | ||
841 | self.cmdclass[command] = klass | |
842 | return klass | |
843 | ||
844 | raise DistutilsModuleError("invalid command '%s'" % command) | |
845 | ||
846 | def get_command_obj(self, command, create=1): | |
847 | """Return the command object for 'command'. Normally this object | |
848 | is cached on a previous call to 'get_command_obj()'; if no command | |
849 | object for 'command' is in the cache, then we either create and | |
850 | return it (if 'create' is true) or return None. | |
851 | """ | |
852 | cmd_obj = self.command_obj.get(command) | |
853 | if not cmd_obj and create: | |
854 | if DEBUG: | |
855 | self.announce( | |
856 | "Distribution.get_command_obj(): " | |
857 | "creating '%s' command object" % command | |
858 | ) | |
859 | ||
860 | klass = self.get_command_class(command) | |
861 | cmd_obj = self.command_obj[command] = klass(self) | |
862 | self.have_run[command] = 0 | |
863 | ||
864 | # Set any options that were supplied in config files | |
865 | # or on the command line. (NB. support for error | |
866 | # reporting is lame here: any errors aren't reported | |
867 | # until 'finalize_options()' is called, which means | |
868 | # we won't report the source of the error.) | |
869 | options = self.command_options.get(command) | |
870 | if options: | |
871 | self._set_command_options(cmd_obj, options) | |
872 | ||
873 | return cmd_obj | |
874 | ||
875 | def _set_command_options(self, command_obj, option_dict=None): # noqa: C901 | |
876 | """Set the options for 'command_obj' from 'option_dict'. Basically | |
877 | this means copying elements of a dictionary ('option_dict') to | |
878 | attributes of an instance ('command'). | |
879 | ||
880 | 'command_obj' must be a Command instance. If 'option_dict' is not | |
881 | supplied, uses the standard option dictionary for this command | |
882 | (from 'self.command_options'). | |
883 | """ | |
884 | command_name = command_obj.get_command_name() | |
885 | if option_dict is None: | |
886 | option_dict = self.get_option_dict(command_name) | |
887 | ||
888 | if DEBUG: | |
889 | self.announce(" setting options for '%s' command:" % command_name) | |
890 | for (option, (source, value)) in option_dict.items(): | |
891 | if DEBUG: | |
892 | self.announce(" {} = {} (from {})".format(option, value, source)) | |
893 | try: | |
894 | bool_opts = [translate_longopt(o) for o in command_obj.boolean_options] | |
895 | except AttributeError: | |
896 | bool_opts = [] | |
897 | try: | |
898 | neg_opt = command_obj.negative_opt | |
899 | except AttributeError: | |
900 | neg_opt = {} | |
901 | ||
902 | try: | |
903 | is_string = isinstance(value, str) | |
904 | if option in neg_opt and is_string: | |
905 | setattr(command_obj, neg_opt[option], not strtobool(value)) | |
906 | elif option in bool_opts and is_string: | |
907 | setattr(command_obj, option, strtobool(value)) | |
908 | elif hasattr(command_obj, option): | |
909 | setattr(command_obj, option, value) | |
910 | else: | |
911 | raise DistutilsOptionError( | |
912 | "error in %s: command '%s' has no such option '%s'" | |
913 | % (source, command_name, option) | |
914 | ) | |
915 | except ValueError as msg: | |
916 | raise DistutilsOptionError(msg) | |
917 | ||
918 | def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0): | |
919 | """Reinitializes a command to the state it was in when first | |
920 | returned by 'get_command_obj()': ie., initialized but not yet | |
921 | finalized. This provides the opportunity to sneak option | |
922 | values in programmatically, overriding or supplementing | |
923 | user-supplied values from the config files and command line. | |
924 | You'll have to re-finalize the command object (by calling | |
925 | 'finalize_options()' or 'ensure_finalized()') before using it for | |
926 | real. | |
927 | ||
928 | 'command' should be a command name (string) or command object. If | |
929 | 'reinit_subcommands' is true, also reinitializes the command's | |
930 | sub-commands, as declared by the 'sub_commands' class attribute (if | |
931 | it has one). See the "install" command for an example. Only | |
932 | reinitializes the sub-commands that actually matter, ie. those | |
933 | whose test predicates return true. | |
934 | ||
935 | Returns the reinitialized command object. | |
936 | """ | |
937 | from distutils.cmd import Command | |
938 | ||
939 | if not isinstance(command, Command): | |
940 | command_name = command | |
941 | command = self.get_command_obj(command_name) | |
942 | else: | |
943 | command_name = command.get_command_name() | |
944 | ||
945 | if not command.finalized: | |
946 | return command | |
947 | command.initialize_options() | |
948 | command.finalized = 0 | |
949 | self.have_run[command_name] = 0 | |
950 | self._set_command_options(command) | |
951 | ||
952 | if reinit_subcommands: | |
953 | for sub in command.get_sub_commands(): | |
954 | self.reinitialize_command(sub, reinit_subcommands) | |
955 | ||
956 | return command | |
957 | ||
958 | # -- Methods that operate on the Distribution ---------------------- | |
959 | ||
960 | def announce(self, msg, level=logging.INFO): | |
961 | log.log(level, msg) | |
962 | ||
963 | def run_commands(self): | |
964 | """Run each command that was seen on the setup script command line. | |
965 | Uses the list of commands found and cache of command objects | |
966 | created by 'get_command_obj()'. | |
967 | """ | |
968 | for cmd in self.commands: | |
969 | self.run_command(cmd) | |
970 | ||
971 | # -- Methods that operate on its Commands -------------------------- | |
972 | ||
973 | def run_command(self, command): | |
974 | """Do whatever it takes to run a command (including nothing at all, | |
975 | if the command has already been run). Specifically: if we have | |
976 | already created and run the command named by 'command', return | |
977 | silently without doing anything. If the command named by 'command' | |
978 | doesn't even have a command object yet, create one. Then invoke | |
979 | 'run()' on that command object (or an existing one). | |
980 | """ | |
981 | # Already been here, done that? then return silently. | |
982 | if self.have_run.get(command): | |
983 | return | |
984 | ||
985 | log.info("running %s", command) | |
986 | cmd_obj = self.get_command_obj(command) | |
987 | cmd_obj.ensure_finalized() | |
988 | cmd_obj.run() | |
989 | self.have_run[command] = 1 | |
990 | ||
991 | # -- Distribution query methods ------------------------------------ | |
992 | ||
993 | def has_pure_modules(self): | |
994 | return len(self.packages or self.py_modules or []) > 0 | |
995 | ||
996 | def has_ext_modules(self): | |
997 | return self.ext_modules and len(self.ext_modules) > 0 | |
998 | ||
999 | def has_c_libraries(self): | |
1000 | return self.libraries and len(self.libraries) > 0 | |
1001 | ||
1002 | def has_modules(self): | |
1003 | return self.has_pure_modules() or self.has_ext_modules() | |
1004 | ||
1005 | def has_headers(self): | |
1006 | return self.headers and len(self.headers) > 0 | |
1007 | ||
1008 | def has_scripts(self): | |
1009 | return self.scripts and len(self.scripts) > 0 | |
1010 | ||
1011 | def has_data_files(self): | |
1012 | return self.data_files and len(self.data_files) > 0 | |
1013 | ||
1014 | def is_pure(self): | |
1015 | return ( | |
1016 | self.has_pure_modules() | |
1017 | and not self.has_ext_modules() | |
1018 | and not self.has_c_libraries() | |
1019 | ) | |
1020 | ||
1021 | # -- Metadata query methods ---------------------------------------- | |
1022 | ||
1023 | # If you're looking for 'get_name()', 'get_version()', and so forth, | |
1024 | # they are defined in a sneaky way: the constructor binds self.get_XXX | |
1025 | # to self.metadata.get_XXX. The actual code is in the | |
1026 | # DistributionMetadata class, below. | |
1027 | ||
1028 | ||
1029 | class DistributionMetadata: | |
1030 | """Dummy class to hold the distribution meta-data: name, version, | |
1031 | author, and so forth. | |
1032 | """ | |
1033 | ||
1034 | _METHOD_BASENAMES = ( | |
1035 | "name", | |
1036 | "version", | |
1037 | "author", | |
1038 | "author_email", | |
1039 | "maintainer", | |
1040 | "maintainer_email", | |
1041 | "url", | |
1042 | "license", | |
1043 | "description", | |
1044 | "long_description", | |
1045 | "keywords", | |
1046 | "platforms", | |
1047 | "fullname", | |
1048 | "contact", | |
1049 | "contact_email", | |
1050 | "classifiers", | |
1051 | "download_url", | |
1052 | # PEP 314 | |
1053 | "provides", | |
1054 | "requires", | |
1055 | "obsoletes", | |
1056 | ) | |
1057 | ||
1058 | def __init__(self, path=None): | |
1059 | if path is not None: | |
1060 | self.read_pkg_file(open(path)) | |
1061 | else: | |
1062 | self.name = None | |
1063 | self.version = None | |
1064 | self.author = None | |
1065 | self.author_email = None | |
1066 | self.maintainer = None | |
1067 | self.maintainer_email = None | |
1068 | self.url = None | |
1069 | self.license = None | |
1070 | self.description = None | |
1071 | self.long_description = None | |
1072 | self.keywords = None | |
1073 | self.platforms = None | |
1074 | self.classifiers = None | |
1075 | self.download_url = None | |
1076 | # PEP 314 | |
1077 | self.provides = None | |
1078 | self.requires = None | |
1079 | self.obsoletes = None | |
1080 | ||
1081 | def read_pkg_file(self, file): | |
1082 | """Reads the metadata values from a file object.""" | |
1083 | msg = message_from_file(file) | |
1084 | ||
1085 | def _read_field(name): | |
1086 | value = msg[name] | |
1087 | if value and value != "UNKNOWN": | |
1088 | return value | |
1089 | ||
1090 | def _read_list(name): | |
1091 | values = msg.get_all(name, None) | |
1092 | if values == []: | |
1093 | return None | |
1094 | return values | |
1095 | ||
1096 | metadata_version = msg['metadata-version'] | |
1097 | self.name = _read_field('name') | |
1098 | self.version = _read_field('version') | |
1099 | self.description = _read_field('summary') | |
1100 | # we are filling author only. | |
1101 | self.author = _read_field('author') | |
1102 | self.maintainer = None | |
1103 | self.author_email = _read_field('author-email') | |
1104 | self.maintainer_email = None | |
1105 | self.url = _read_field('home-page') | |
1106 | self.license = _read_field('license') | |
1107 | ||
1108 | if 'download-url' in msg: | |
1109 | self.download_url = _read_field('download-url') | |
1110 | else: | |
1111 | self.download_url = None | |
1112 | ||
1113 | self.long_description = _read_field('description') | |
1114 | self.description = _read_field('summary') | |
1115 | ||
1116 | if 'keywords' in msg: | |
1117 | self.keywords = _read_field('keywords').split(',') | |
1118 | ||
1119 | self.platforms = _read_list('platform') | |
1120 | self.classifiers = _read_list('classifier') | |
1121 | ||
1122 | # PEP 314 - these fields only exist in 1.1 | |
1123 | if metadata_version == '1.1': | |
1124 | self.requires = _read_list('requires') | |
1125 | self.provides = _read_list('provides') | |
1126 | self.obsoletes = _read_list('obsoletes') | |
1127 | else: | |
1128 | self.requires = None | |
1129 | self.provides = None | |
1130 | self.obsoletes = None | |
1131 | ||
1132 | def write_pkg_info(self, base_dir): | |
1133 | """Write the PKG-INFO file into the release tree.""" | |
1134 | with open( | |
1135 | os.path.join(base_dir, 'PKG-INFO'), 'w', encoding='UTF-8' | |
1136 | ) as pkg_info: | |
1137 | self.write_pkg_file(pkg_info) | |
1138 | ||
1139 | def write_pkg_file(self, file): | |
1140 | """Write the PKG-INFO format data to a file object.""" | |
1141 | version = '1.0' | |
1142 | if ( | |
1143 | self.provides | |
1144 | or self.requires | |
1145 | or self.obsoletes | |
1146 | or self.classifiers | |
1147 | or self.download_url | |
1148 | ): | |
1149 | version = '1.1' | |
1150 | ||
1151 | # required fields | |
1152 | file.write('Metadata-Version: %s\n' % version) | |
1153 | file.write('Name: %s\n' % self.get_name()) | |
1154 | file.write('Version: %s\n' % self.get_version()) | |
1155 | ||
1156 | def maybe_write(header, val): | |
1157 | if val: | |
1158 | file.write(f"{header}: {val}\n") | |
1159 | ||
1160 | # optional fields | |
1161 | maybe_write("Summary", self.get_description()) | |
1162 | maybe_write("Home-page", self.get_url()) | |
1163 | maybe_write("Author", self.get_contact()) | |
1164 | maybe_write("Author-email", self.get_contact_email()) | |
1165 | maybe_write("License", self.get_license()) | |
1166 | maybe_write("Download-URL", self.download_url) | |
1167 | maybe_write("Description", rfc822_escape(self.get_long_description() or "")) | |
1168 | maybe_write("Keywords", ",".join(self.get_keywords())) | |
1169 | ||
1170 | self._write_list(file, 'Platform', self.get_platforms()) | |
1171 | self._write_list(file, 'Classifier', self.get_classifiers()) | |
1172 | ||
1173 | # PEP 314 | |
1174 | self._write_list(file, 'Requires', self.get_requires()) | |
1175 | self._write_list(file, 'Provides', self.get_provides()) | |
1176 | self._write_list(file, 'Obsoletes', self.get_obsoletes()) | |
1177 | ||
1178 | def _write_list(self, file, name, values): | |
1179 | values = values or [] | |
1180 | for value in values: | |
1181 | file.write('{}: {}\n'.format(name, value)) | |
1182 | ||
1183 | # -- Metadata query methods ---------------------------------------- | |
1184 | ||
1185 | def get_name(self): | |
1186 | return self.name or "UNKNOWN" | |
1187 | ||
1188 | def get_version(self): | |
1189 | return self.version or "0.0.0" | |
1190 | ||
1191 | def get_fullname(self): | |
1192 | return "{}-{}".format(self.get_name(), self.get_version()) | |
1193 | ||
1194 | def get_author(self): | |
1195 | return self.author | |
1196 | ||
1197 | def get_author_email(self): | |
1198 | return self.author_email | |
1199 | ||
1200 | def get_maintainer(self): | |
1201 | return self.maintainer | |
1202 | ||
1203 | def get_maintainer_email(self): | |
1204 | return self.maintainer_email | |
1205 | ||
1206 | def get_contact(self): | |
1207 | return self.maintainer or self.author | |
1208 | ||
1209 | def get_contact_email(self): | |
1210 | return self.maintainer_email or self.author_email | |
1211 | ||
1212 | def get_url(self): | |
1213 | return self.url | |
1214 | ||
1215 | def get_license(self): | |
1216 | return self.license | |
1217 | ||
1218 | get_licence = get_license | |
1219 | ||
1220 | def get_description(self): | |
1221 | return self.description | |
1222 | ||
1223 | def get_long_description(self): | |
1224 | return self.long_description | |
1225 | ||
1226 | def get_keywords(self): | |
1227 | return self.keywords or [] | |
1228 | ||
1229 | def set_keywords(self, value): | |
1230 | self.keywords = _ensure_list(value, 'keywords') | |
1231 | ||
1232 | def get_platforms(self): | |
1233 | return self.platforms | |
1234 | ||
1235 | def set_platforms(self, value): | |
1236 | self.platforms = _ensure_list(value, 'platforms') | |
1237 | ||
1238 | def get_classifiers(self): | |
1239 | return self.classifiers or [] | |
1240 | ||
1241 | def set_classifiers(self, value): | |
1242 | self.classifiers = _ensure_list(value, 'classifiers') | |
1243 | ||
1244 | def get_download_url(self): | |
1245 | return self.download_url | |
1246 | ||
1247 | # PEP 314 | |
1248 | def get_requires(self): | |
1249 | return self.requires or [] | |
1250 | ||
1251 | def set_requires(self, value): | |
1252 | import distutils.versionpredicate | |
1253 | ||
1254 | for v in value: | |
1255 | distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v) | |
1256 | self.requires = list(value) | |
1257 | ||
1258 | def get_provides(self): | |
1259 | return self.provides or [] | |
1260 | ||
1261 | def set_provides(self, value): | |
1262 | value = [v.strip() for v in value] | |
1263 | for v in value: | |
1264 | import distutils.versionpredicate | |
1265 | ||
1266 | distutils.versionpredicate.split_provision(v) | |
1267 | self.provides = value | |
1268 | ||
1269 | def get_obsoletes(self): | |
1270 | return self.obsoletes or [] | |
1271 | ||
1272 | def set_obsoletes(self, value): | |
1273 | import distutils.versionpredicate | |
1274 | ||
1275 | for v in value: | |
1276 | distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v) | |
1277 | self.obsoletes = list(value) | |
1278 | ||
1279 | ||
1280 | def fix_help_options(options): | |
1281 | """Convert a 4-tuple 'help_options' list as found in various command | |
1282 | classes to the 3-tuple form required by FancyGetopt. | |
1283 | """ | |
1284 | new_options = [] | |
1285 | for help_tuple in options: | |
1286 | new_options.append(help_tuple[0:3]) | |
1287 | return new_options |